On 6/9/16, 01:05, "Deepa Dinamani" deepa.kernel@gmail.com wrote:
boot_time is represented as a struct timespec. struct timespec and CURRENT_TIME are not y2038 safe. Overall, the plan is to use timespec64 for all internal kernel representation of timestamps. CURRENT_TIME will also be removed. Use struct timespec64 to represent boot_time. And, ktime_get_real_ts64() for the boot_time value.
boot_time is used to construct the nfs client boot verifier. This will now wrap in 2106 instead of 2038 on 32-bit systems. The server only relies on the value being persistent until reboot so the wrapping should be fine.
We really do not give a damn about wraparound here, since the boot time is only ever compared for an exact match, and the odds of two reboots occurring exactly 2^32 * 10^9 nanoseconds apart are cosmically small...
If struct timespec is going away, can we just convert this into a ktime_t?
Trond
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